Something lit up the sky over Odisha on the evening of May 8, and nobody who saw it could quite believe their eyes.
A bright, comet-like object with a long, twisting orange-white tail streaked across the horizon, visible not just across Odisha but as far away as Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, hundreds of kilometres from the launch site.
Videos poured onto social media within minutes.
The internet had one question: what was that?
WHAT EXACTLY WAS LAUNCHED OVER ODISHA?
The mystery has now been solved. The Ministry of Defence confirmed that India successfully conducted the flight trial of an advanced Agni missile equipped with MIRV capability from Dr APJ Abdul Kalam Island, Chandipur, Odisha on May 8, 2026.
MIRV stands for Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle. In plain language, it means one single missile carries multiple warheads that can separate mid-flight and strike several completely different targets spread across a large area, simultaneously.
The missile was tested with multiple payloads aimed at targets distributed across a large geographical area in the Indian Ocean Region.
WHAT MAKES THIS MISSILE SO SIGNIFICANT?
A conventional missile carries one warhead for one target. A MIRV-equipped missile is fundamentally different: it is, in effect, several weapons in one.
This makes it exponentially harder to intercept, because a missile defence system would need to track and destroy multiple incoming warheads at once rather than just one.
Raksha Mantri Rajnath Singh complimented DRDO, the Indian Army and industry on the successful test, stating it would add incredible capability to the country’s defence preparedness against growing threat perceptions.
WHY WAS THE MISSILE VISIBLE SO FAR AWAY?
The spectacular visuals were not a coincidence of timing. When a missile is launched at twilight, its exhaust plume, the trail of gases left behind at extreme altitudes, catches the last sunlight and glows brilliantly against the darkening sky.
The exclusion zone declared before the launch stretched approximately 3,560 km over the Bay of Bengal, more than double the 1,680 km corridor declared for India’s separate anti-ship missile test on May 1. That scale is consistent with a long-range strategic system of this class.
India now joins a small group of nations possessing MIRV-capable long-range missiles, a significant milestone in its strategic deterrence programme.
– Ends
